by Sarita Leone
Table of Contents
Excerpt
A Lady’s Secret
Copyright
Dedication
Chapter 1
Chapter 2
Chapter 3
Chapter 4
Chapter 5
Chapter 6
Chapter 7
Chapter 8
Chapter 9
Chapter 10
Chapter 11
Chapter 12
Chapter 13
Chapter 14
Chapter 15
Chapter 16
Chapter 17
Chapter 18
Chapter 19
Chapter 20
Chapter 21
Chapter 22
Chapter 23
Chapter 24
Chapter 25
Chapter 26
Chapter 27
Chapter 28
Chapter 29
Chapter 30
Chapter 31
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Amy cringed.
Even the knock on the door sounded angry. “That will be Oliver.” Will looked from wife to friend, then shrugged. “If I do not open the door, I suspect he will knock it in.”
“Let him in, dear.” Vivian sat beside her on the small settee and now patted her hand. “We shall talk some more, but I think now we are ready to face the rest of this lovely day, aren’t we?”
They had been that way for hours, holding hands and sharing confidences. Well, Amy had shared mostly, both confessions and a multitude of tears. She had not gotten any harsh judgment from Vivian, only soothing words of encouragement and many back rubs. It had been just what she needed most, a caring ear to listen and other shoulders to help carry the burden of her secret.
She scrubbed her palms over her cheeks, praying the evidence of her tears had not turned her ugly. A Friday-faced female never garnered a man’s good attentions, and she did not wish to be seen in such an unflattering light.
“Yes, I do believe we are.” When Will turned and went to the door, she reached out and pulled Vivian into a quick embrace. Whispering into the other woman’s ear, she said, “Thank you. I feel ever so much better now.”
A Lady’s Secret
by
Sarita Leone
A Willowbrook Manor Romance,
Book Three
This is a work of fiction. Names, characters, places, and incidents are either the product of the author’s imagination or are used fictitiously, and any resemblance to actual persons living or dead, business establishments, events, or locales, is entirely coincidental.
A Lady’s Secret
COPYRIGHT © 2016 by Sarita Leone
All rights reserved. No part of this book may be used or reproduced in any manner whatsoever without written permission of the author or The Wild Rose Press, Inc. except in the case of brief quotations embodied in critical articles or reviews.
Contact Information: [email protected]
Cover Art by Debbie Taylor
The Wild Rose Press, Inc.
PO Box 708
Adams Basin, NY 14410-0708
Visit us at www.thewildrosepress.com
Publishing History
First Tea Rose Edition, 2016
Print ISBN 978-1-5092-0757-2
Digital ISBN 978-1-5092-0758-9
A Willowbrook Manor Romance, Book Three
Published in the United States of America
Dedication
Always, for my sweet man.
Chapter 1
London, 1816
Being a peer had its advantages. Lord Oliver Gregory was accustomed to getting what he wanted, when he wanted it. Being kept waiting sent his genial nature upside down. He turned to his assistant with a scowl that would have cowed a lesser man.
“We can’t just stand here like a pair of lamp posts. Dash it all, we’ve got to do something.”
Will Fulbright had been through too many difficult times with his employer to be put off by a facial expression. He kept his tone neutral when he spoke.
“What would you have me do, Your Lordship?”
“Don’t call me that, for one thing.” Oliver kept his gaze fixed. “Especially here. I would rather my presence go unnoticed.”
He stared at the wooden black door set discreetly into the façade of the building directly opposite. No sign of anyone entering or exiting. To passersby, the three-story brick edifice would not bring attention. It was like so many others in the city, flat-fronted, weathered red-brick, complete with black shutters on the ground-floor windows to keep prying eyes from…well, from prying.
But Oliver knew better. He was aware of what the ordinary exterior concealed. And, he and Will had witnessed, barely fifteen minutes earlier, a parlor maid from his own estate slipping inside. Had Bridget not been one of his mother’s favorites, he would simply have terminated the young woman’s position at Willowbrook Manor. But she had been with the family for quite some time. Therefore, he could not dismiss her without attempting to question the woman. As well, Bridget’s sister was his own sister Lucie’s lady’s maid. Upsetting Lucie’s maid meant upsetting Lucie—and that was something to be avoided entirely.
“Then perhaps we should leave.” Will turned to take a step toward the corner, and undoubtedly would have turned onto the next lane without taking a single look back, but Oliver grabbed a fistful of gray morning coat and gave it a tug.
“We are not leaving until we have rousted that woman from that-that…” Oliver’s lips snapped closed in disgust. “From that place, that—”
“Whore’s den?”
“Good Lord, man—have you no shame?”
Oliver glanced over his shoulder, but no one seemed to pay them any mind. Apparently two well-dressed gentlemen standing in the shadow of one building while staring at another wasn’t enough to warrant curiosity.
“I haven’t done a thing to be ashamed of. Let me point out the obvious—you haven’t done anything, either.”
“Not today. But have you forgotten my past?” Oliver was never going to be proud of, nor forget, what had taken place earlier in his life. And although it had been two years, give or take a month or so, since he had returned from abroad a raving lunatic, the memories were never far from his mind.
“I have not forgotten, although I do believe it would serve you better if you did attempt to let the events settle back in your head, into the fuzzy, out-of-focus spot reserved for escapades of that sort.”
“Never.” Oliver would not allow time to dull his accountability. He had nearly ruined his family and caused his own demise. No, time should not be allowed to cast his failings in a favorable or even fuzzy light. He shifted his weight from one foot to the other. His boots felt tight around the ankle he had twisted last week during a riding accident.
“Your ankle still pains you.” Will pointed with his walking stick to the swollen area. “It bulges against the leather. We may have to cut you out of those. Come on, let’s get going. We cannot wait here all day. She may never come out.”
Oliver ground his molars so hard a pain shot up his cheek. Taking a deep breath, he forced himself to unclench his jaw. He hadn’t wanted to be pushed into this position, but it seemed there was no other way.
He would have rather ridden post haste to Gretna Green with the least attractive woman in his social circle—a sudden image of one gap-toothed, frizzy-haired daughter of an earl who had feet long enough to paddle a boat filled his head—than enter a den of iniquity. But the earl’s daughter was not at hand, and the maid needed saving, so he squared his shoulders.
“Correct. She may never come out—and that is precisely why we are going in. We shall retrieve Bridget and be on our way. Now, le
t’s go.”
“But-but—Oliver, are you sure about this?”
The fact that his assistant not only used his Christian name but did so at a rather high volume right in the center of Bond Street—for Will had followed on his heels the moment he moved from the shadows toward their destination—showed just how unwise going into such an establishment could prove to be.
One temptation not ignored had the potential to pull him back into the horror he’d worked to leave behind. That is all it will take, Oliver thought. Bile rose in his throat, but he swallowed it down. He did not plan to fall under the spell of any demon that had held him captive prior.
He would just go in, get the woman, and get out. In. Out. And Will would be beside him, so there could be no way to be snared by temptation. The man had dragged him from more unsavory places than this one appeared to be.
“I don’t think this is a sound move.” Will tugged Oliver’s jacket, a discreet pull on the expensive fabric. It was fast and unobtrusive but it got the message across.
Had the situation not been so threatening, he would never have placed a hand on Oliver in public.
“I agree. But there is nothing else to do, man.” Oliver avoided an oncoming curricle with a couple of extra-long steps. Wincing as he came down hard on his left foot, he growled, “Botheration! She had to go in there? Damn it, why couldn’t she have visited a dressmaker? A milliner? Anywhere but an establishment like this. Why? Why would she come here, of all places?”
He reached a hand out, lifted the heavy brass knocker, and struck it against the door three times.
“Why? Because parlor maids do not buy dresses and hats on Bond Street. They sew their own, from lengths of fabric bought below stairs and shared amongst the help.”
Oliver knew it must be true, although he had never before given any thought to his staff’s apparel. Uniforms were a detail he did not trouble himself over. That was his mother’s domain, not his.
Men provided the means to run a household. Women did the actual running.
Footsteps, heavy and hard, rapped against what he presumed to be a wooden floor. They grew louder.
Will spoke near his ear. “I really don’t think we should go inside this den of iniquity. Why, if Vivian ever finds out I so much as stepped one foot over the threshold…”
Vivian, Oliver’s distant relation, had wed Will six months earlier at Willowbrook Manor. They had met in the manor, fallen in love there, and made their vows in the rose garden. Now, they lived in a small cottage on the property.
“Why worry about Vivian? What are you—a man or a mouse?”
The door swung open to reveal a doorman who was so wide and tall it was impossible to see past his dark blue uniform. The sound of women’s laughter, mixed with deeper, masculine voices, met their ears. A sweet scent, opium if Oliver guessed correctly, wafted out to greet them.
“Neither,” Will answered, his voice low. “I’m married, and that trumps man or mouse in any situation. Someday, you’ll understand that.” He paused, then added, “That is, if we make it out of this whorehouse alive.”
Chapter 2
“May I help you, gentlemen?” The blue wall looked like any ordinary butler although rather much bigger than was the norm. Facial features carefully arranged to give no hint to what was, even now, taking place beyond his broad back. He gave both Oliver and Will a brief inspection, gazing down to the tips of their shoes before looking askance once again at Will. “Sir?”
That he directed the conversation toward his help rather than to the Lord himself almost made Oliver grin. He sent a smallish nudge from his elbow to Will’s, just the barest of touches to send the message to keep this charade going.
“Of course you may help us, my fine man.” That his assistant could assume the upper class role so seamlessly, his tone a near-perfect imitation of his own, further amused Oliver. “We require admittance to your, ahem, establishment.”
Again the man looked them over.
Finally, “Is Lady Panda expecting you?”
Lady Panda, indeed!
Will nearly choked but he managed a retort. “Why, of course we are expected. You do not think a peer would simply intrude on someone as renowned and respected as Lady Panda, do you? My word—how preposterous.”
The man stepped back, unnerved by the bluster. While he had been speaking, Will waved his walking stick through the air. At one point, Oliver had to duck to avoid being struck by the business end of the thing.
With a hmmph! he led the way, leaving Oliver to follow. Two steps behind his friend, he saw how the other’s life must be. Not called upon to make a decision or be consulted about anything much. No voice in whether to stay or go, do or not do. Never a leader, always to tag behind. And while Will was not an unfortunate-looking sort, as fellows went, he was forced to admit the view was not altogether wonderful.
Watching another man’s shoulders and backside as they brushed past the burly fellow was not the highlight of his day. But, they were in. And, no one could suspect that Lord Gregory of Willowbrook Manor and London was inside such a seedy residence.
Pocket doors of deep, mahogany wood led off a long, wide center corridor but they were all pulled closed. Low, laughing murmuring voices penetrated the dark wood but there was no way to ascertain to whom those hushed tones belonged.
The air was nearly lavender with smoke, a cloying scent borne on an air current that pulled it past his face in a steady stream. He wondered about the source of the air current, at the same time attempting not to breathe too deeply.
There was only one open door, and it was at the far end of the hallway. Will walked to it with such a fast pace that he was grateful his long legs were able to keep up, despite the aching ankle. A man of lesser stature may have had to scamper behind to maintain the position.
The room they entered was shadowy. Windows obscured by tightly-drawn heavy brocade draperies kept the sun’s position a mystery. Candlelight puddled on tabletops and in front of large, gilt-edged mirrors.
The only occupant who looked up when they entered the room was a young maid. Petite and despite her hair being neatly tucked into her white lace headwear, wisps of gold escaped to curl about her small ears. She looked like a ray of sunshine.
Entirely too young to be in a place reeking of smoke. She carried a silver tray topped with tumblers of amber liquid, which she immediately brought to them with a curtsey so practiced none of the glassware moved a bit.
“Lady Panda bids you welcome.” Her voice was small, to match her size. “Please, help yourself to some refreshment.”
Oliver did not respond, putting himself squarely in the role of unassuming manservant. Neither seen nor heard, that was the way of life his subterfuge cast him in. It was good, because the whiff of alcohol mixed with something even more intoxicating than the spirits wafted from the tumblers when she’d dipped.
The temptation to sample the beverage was non-existent. Only a stupid man falls in the same hole more than once. He hadn’t nearly lost his life and battled desperately to scrabble out of the addiction trap to tumble into it a second time.
Never again, he had sworn. And, that was an oath he planned to keep.
Will, however, was denied the opportunity to wave the tray off. Not that he didn’t try, regardless.
“Ahem…ah, no, thank you. I do not feel especially thirsty at this moment.” He hadn’t relinquished his walking stick to the man at the door, so he gave the floor a solid poke with it to punctuate his refusal.
“But, your Lordship, Lady Panda insists her guests be comfortable. Please, accept her hospitality.” She gazed from one man to the other, and Oliver saw in her eyes what her lips would not divulge. She was instructed—no, obligated—to see the guests had a tumbler in hand shortly after their arrival. Depending on how stern the chain of command was in the household, the girl would most likely be punished if she did not properly carry out her duty. Perhaps a dressing down. Perhaps something more severe.
Oliver’s mothe
r ran Willowbrook with a firm hand but had never allowed any of their servants to be misused or inappropriately punished. Once or twice in his lifetime, there had been instant dismissals from service, but that had been the worst of it. And that had been for substantial infractions Mother deemed could not be corrected with a stern reprimand.
Fear showed plainly in the cornflower-blue eyes that glanced his way.
“I am sure Lady Panda means well, but I am not thirsty at this mom—”
Oliver cleared his throat. Loudly.
Will knew him well enough to pause.
They stood silent for a few moments.
He repeated the throat clearing. This time he gave Will a gentle bump on the back.
“Excuse me, your Lordship. I did not mean to bump.”
Will turned to him. A smirk, and a glimmer in his eyes, gave his face a rakish appearance. “Your ankle, Mr. Greendick? It pains you, doesn’t it?” He raised a pointed eyebrow, daring Oliver to take umbrage, before he turned a smile upon the young woman.
The maid swallowed a giggle but not so quickly that they did not hear the noise.
He nearly choked on the laughter that threatened to overtake him. Perhaps it was the smoke in the air that let his guard down a tad; he’d been trying not to inhale too deeply but one had to breathe.
He cleared his throat again, a swift glance at the maid confirming his suspicion that she was doing her best not to giggle. Who knew how long the young thing stood in this room, inhaling the strong, mind-altering smoke? It was a miracle she could keep to her feet the way she did.
Well, Will wasn’t dealing with a schoolboy.
“I hate to say so, but it does indeed, Lord Gasball.”
His assistant whirled around, his brows disappearing beneath his hairline. His eyes were huge circles on his usually placid face. Oliver met his gaze with a bland expression.
“Well, then we shall be swift, Greendick.”
“I would appreciate that, Your Lordship.” He waited a beat, then nodded toward the maid. She had covered her mouth with her free hand, her eyes brimming with unshed tears of mirth. “Perhaps the young woman is correct. It seems the thing to at least taste the libation. It does look thirst-quenching.”